The last leg of the journey is the easiest, Boruch finds, in a car again after hours of breathing stale airplane air and feeling cramped. There is a certain relaxation he feels as the taxi — no, not an Uber; his kids make fun of him for never signing up for Uber or figuring out how it works — leaves the airport tunnel and heads into the streets of real New Jersey, the grimy windows and sloping row houses and massage parlors and tanning salons and small delis, checks cashed here, sandwiches made fresh daily.